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<UID>
9301160474
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
930430
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, April 30, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
STANLEY CUP; ROUND 1
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WINGS' BIG 3 TAKE PRESSURE OFF CHEVY
WHICH IS THE BETTER TEAM? THERE'S NO DOUBT NOW
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
TORONTO --  Somewhere between the third goal, which Paul Coffey put in by
himself, and the fourth goal, which Paul Ysebaert knocked in while his team
was down a player, and the sixth goal, which  Steve Yzerman slapped in with
yet another shorthanded squad, somewhere in there, the Red Wings, who had
coffin dirt all over them when this night started, suddenly realized a basic
truth about this playoff  series against Toronto:

  They are the better team.

  It's that simple. When all the talk swirls into madness, you put on your
work clothes and you look in the mirror. What the Wings saw was a team  that
should score almost at will, themselves, against a team whose power play has
far more play than power. What they saw was a team with too much talent
against a team that could be rattled once it  fell behind. What they saw was a
group of men in Detroit uniforms who had worked too hard and too long to go
home in April.
  And now they don't have to.
  Red ain't dead.
  "We know we have a  good team here," said Dino Ciccarelli, who spearheaded
the Wings' 7-3 assault on the Leafs Thursday night to push this series to a
deciding Game 7. "Toronto didn't beat us in Game 5. We gave it to them.  They
know that. Tonight was a gut-check. A character-builder. And that's just what
we needed."
  You can say that again. Ciccarelli played as if he were trying to earn his
contract in one night, and  Sergei Fedorov looked like Nate Archibald, driving
through blue uniforms as if they were still on hangers. It was a night for
highly efficient offense (four power-play goals, two shorthanded goals) and
penalty-killing defense that downright embarrassed Toronto's attack.
  But for all that, what the Wings showed Thursday was no more impressive
than what they didn't show: They didn't show nerves. They  didn't show fear.
They came out like the enemy in a video game, bombing here, bombing there, and
they didn't stop until the red lights had flashed so many times, you'd have
thought the police were pulling  someone over. They should have. The Leafs.
For impersonating a playoff team. The game Toronto put out there, at home,
with a chance to win the series, was little more than a tissue drop.
Embarrassing.  And the Wings, perhaps sensing this, played like a team that
felt it was supposed to win. How can I put this? They played like a team that
enjoyed being on the brink. By the second period, with a shorthanded cast,
they were toying with the Leafs, playing keep-away on their power play,
dancing around them, leaving them flailing.
  I can't tell you how important this will be if the Wings are to run all the
 way into June with this playoff thing. Every championship team I've witnessed
has a certain attraction to pressure. Such teams almost court it. The night
before this game, Yzerman and Gerard Gallant  went for a walk in the city.
They talked about their "dire" situation. They talked about all the pressure.
They talked about how awful it would be if they were eliminated. And then, out
of the blue,  they began to chuckle, then laugh. Pretty soon, they were
cracking up. Believe it or not, that's the kind of sign you look for. 
  "What did you learn about your team tonight?" Yzerman was asked after  the
win.
  "That we respond to a challenge," he said.
  Red ain't dead.
Cheveldae came through 
  Of course, it helps when you do it on the ice. And the Wings did, getting
production from the guys  who get paid to produce. Ciccarelli, who ought to
come with his own No-Pest Strip, disrupted things just enough around the net
-- his specialty -- to knock in three goals. Paul Coffey, the priceless
veteran who warned his younger teammates "the hardest game to win is the one
that clinches it," knocked in the go-ahead puck and assisted on three others.
Yzerman, who had taken heat lately, because  the superstar always takes heat
when the favored team goes south, put in a beautiful goal to close the second
period, assisted on another, and had one more disallowed because he kicked it.
  The goalie?  Oh yes. A word here for Tim Cheveldae. Nice. Here was a guy
you half-expected to skate out, circle the net, and faint. He was booed in his
own arena Tuesday night. He was ripped in the newspapers. And  he made a dumb
play in the first period, coming out of the crease to try to stop Dave
Andreychuk and winding up flat on his stomach as the puck fluttered into the
open net, a play that drew such moans  back in Detroit, you could hear them up
here.
  And yet Cheveldae did not collapse. He collected himself. He concentrated.
He shut out the Leafs in the second period, and he rediscovered his form.
Doing that mid-game is pretty impressive. There were plenty of moments in that
first period when the thought occurred to bail  out Cheveldae and go with
backup Vince Riendeau. But at the start of the  third period, Cheveldae got to
look down the ice and see a new goalie. 
  For Toronto.
  "Did that feel good?" he was asked.
  He hid a grin. "A little," he said. 
  It felt good.
It's not over  yet 
  Now, fair enough. The Wings have not won this series. And the Leafs, when
they play their game -- assuming they can find it now -- can be sticky. But
don't underestimate what the Wings accomplished  on this night. They felt the
nails in their feet, the wall at their backs, and they pushed off, they lived.
Every time you do that in sports, you get a chip for your confidence. And it's
one more chip  you have when the stakes get high again.
  "Hey, we haven't done a damn thing as far as I'm concerned," Coffey said
sternly, eyeing his teammates in the locker room. "We dug ourselves a hole,
and  now we're digging out. That's all.
  "As for the criticism we got (after Game 5), sometimes it takes a scare
like that to see who your friends are, and to remind you who you're playing
for. We're playing  for the guys in this room who have worked eight months to
get here. That's all. And we're not there yet."
  They will be, I figure.  Coffey is cautious. He's supposed to be cautious.
But if you look  at this series, out on the ice, you see it is all there for
the Wings now. Right in front of them. Back home in Game 7. 
  Some things are that simple. On a night when the stadium signs here read,
"The Wings Are Fried!" and the "The Wings Are Plucked!" there was only one
banner missing: "The Wings Are Better."
  One game left to prove it.
  Red ain't dead.
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COLUMN
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